 We've tackled every three-year-old group kind of together, and every year I've tried to take from other programs, and anytime you're changing something in your program, sometimes you're going to change it for the better, sometimes you're going to change it for the worse, but I think that's just necessary growing pains that you have to do, but touching on Erica's point, one thing we say to each other a lot is if something's working, then we don't need to change it until it quits working, and I'd say for anyone training horses, always make sure we diagnose the problem correctly before we change anything, watch your video, decide, did the run not work out because it was a horse training mistake, did it not work out because it was a horse preparation mistake, is it a showmanship mistake, and make sure you're thinking of every aspect of the game, because oftentimes when you're dealing with animals it can be hard to see what the true problem is, and we can chase pretend problems, and we can get up very early in the morning and work very hard to progress nothing, and I remember Lee telling me early on in my program I would show up to a show, hold my horses, let's say long left, show doesn't go very well, I'm like Lee what should I do, what's my homework, he's like shortening them to the left, come to the next show, too short left, long right, and I remember Lee sitting me down one day and saying I really wish you would go home and just fix the problem instead of this constant over correct, pretend you're backing up a trailer, it's no good if you're headed too far left to go too far right, it does you no more good, and I really thought that that was really important, because then I started thinking of cutting like shuffleboard, it's a field thing and it's just enough, everything's just enough, and kind of going back to horses that taught you something like I think back to Syncom Hot's finals at Ferturity was one of the best runs of my life, but definitely an example of just because you can doesn't mean you should, or there is such thing as too much, and I think in that run the penalties I incur are astronomical, it was really cool what was happening, but it's less, Mike could have won, but that much couldn't win, and so that's been really a journey for me, and I think it's hard for a lot of horse trainers, because cutting's not a game of teach them the task, and then that's perfect, done, complete, it's not that kind of game, it's like should I have them hook to the cow or listening to me, well the answer is a little both, it's a game of a little of both, so should I have them crawling around a lot, or should I have them being very careful and slow, well the answer is a bit of both, and should they stop real hard, well a little bit of both, they should kind of stop hard, but they should also kind of get stopped so you don't have a big miss, and so I guess that's what's so addicting of the game is if you can teach a horse to stop big, or you can teach your horse to crawl around, neither thing's good enough, it's not good enough to just stop big, it's not good enough to crawl around, it's not good enough to, they've got to do it all really well a little bit, and finding that in each different horse, in each different horse, and then and yeah so that's that's the wonderful part of our sport, yes for sure, and you really work on the mind game aspect too, don't you, together, how do you do that, well so so for me for me cutting's a lot like golf, and and I when you when you get to helping the bigger time guys, and getting to be in their corner, it's it really tells you a lot about the game, you know, and you're sitting in the cow box, and you're you're you're accidentally seeing their mental process for 45 minutes before they go and compete, and and I I I believe that and I read this every morning I wrote it on my phone, and anytime I'm nervous I'll read it again, and and it's just basically a YouTube debunch of videos on mental coaching, and and listen to them, and and kind of came up with my own little mental process that's that's my job, and and so the the basics are is is that I have to trust the mental process, that's the first rule, and just like people you'll hear people say trust your training, they're trying to get you to quit worrying about horse training, worry about showing, and and so what I try to think if I'm going to show 10 horses that day, I'm going to trust my process all day, I'm going to I'm going to execute the steps, and then and then if I do that all day, don't care about the outcome, I will be very pleased with the outcome, because the steps are what you need to accomplish to have a successful run, so the when I'm walking down to get on my dry work, I'm to breathe slowly, calmly, remember that this is just another horse and it's just another run, and that I will there's no sense, I'm glad I'm nervous because it means I care, but there's no sense in letting nerves decrease my performance, and so I just let go of everything, and I try to tell myself that I'm going to perform with my subconscious mind, which means I'm just going to let muscle memory do the work for me, dry work my horse, tell my guys the cows, and and then I tell myself right before I walk down there that this is my